

there you go, straight from the brewers mouth.I've heard it said that modern dme produces a much fresher tasting beer. Fresh LME is great but more than a few months old and that 'extract taste' will start to appear, dme doesn't suffer this problem.
Just speaking from personal experience I noticed that my beers that were made from DME were free of the 'extract tang' whereas some of the kit/LME brews had it. There is a suggestion that DME stores better as the water has been removed.Reading a lot of US forums though it seems to be widely agreed that DME is less prone to producing a beer that suffers from 'that extract taste'.
My money is on the untreated water, i had the homebrew taste as well until i started treating the beer with campden tablets to take out the chlorine and chloroamine which gives you that very distinctive phenolic homebrew twang.gorymorph wrote:maybe its the water i dont know, it was untreated will treat next time and see what happenes. ANY IDEAS![]()
Perhaps worth mentioning that this is another of our American chums' little foibles - by 'cider' they mean apple juice.the cidery taste procuced by adding sugar
Oh we really are going to have to get you to Sutton!There is no doubt (in my mind) that extract beers and kit beers can make a beer of such high quality that it would impossible for many people (including me) to differentiate them from a commercial brew
where would that be? ;-)Some people here claim that Cask conditioned ale in the UK has some Diacetyl, particularly if the barrel is a little old...